To Wilma aka Junka aka Rita aka Franco:
None of what you wrote are sentences.
What is the difference between these two sentences:
A person who helps others
A person who helps the others???
Which of the two is correct?
A person who likes working so much
Or
A person who likes so much working??
2 answers
Franco, Jutta, Wilma, or whoever -- there's no need to keep changing names. It's clear to us that all the questions are coming from the same computer.
A person who helps others
A person who helps the others???
The first one implies that the person will help all other people (not specifying anyone). The second one implies that he will help specific "others."
A person who likes working so much
Or
A person who likes so much working??
These are incomplete, not full sentences, so it's hard to tell. The first one seems to mean that the person just LOVES to work! The second one means about the same thing, but is awkwardly phrased.
A person who helps others
A person who helps the others???
The first one implies that the person will help all other people (not specifying anyone). The second one implies that he will help specific "others."
A person who likes working so much
Or
A person who likes so much working??
These are incomplete, not full sentences, so it's hard to tell. The first one seems to mean that the person just LOVES to work! The second one means about the same thing, but is awkwardly phrased.